Growing up in the desert taught me to look for beauty and wisdom in not-so-obvious people and places. These are my reflections as I try to live into that lesson in my family, in my church, in my politics and in the world.

Monday, December 08, 2014

If you've read this blog for any length of time at all, you will remember sermons by my friend Bruce Coggin. I've hosted several of his sermons here.

The great good news is that he's now published a book of sermons preached from 2009 to 2014. They were preached as he
served several congregations who were displaced from their buildings after the
split in our diocese, as well as at a couple of other parishes. They are funny, moving,
thoughtful, surprising, and down to earth in the way only a guy with a genius
IQ from Bowie, Montague County, Texas, can commit.

These sermons fed the souls of people who were displaced, hurting, and feeling pretty alone. They helped these folks heal, they empowered them, and they sent them out to offer that healing love to the parts of the world in which they found themselves.

But here's the thing. You don't have to like sermons to love this book. You just have to like great writing and story telling. These are the work of a GREAT story-teller.

Let's Play Godball! Unorthodox Sermons by a Circuit Rider Episcopal Priest from Middle Texas is available at Amazon.

The Foreword is by the Rt. Rev. Sam B. Hulsey, retired bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Northwest Texas.

Owanah Anderson,
long time senior warden at All Saints’, Wichita Falls, writes in a cover blurb,
“Hearing Bruce Coggin preach is an energizing, enlightening experience. His
loving use of language – sometimes homespun, sometimes scholarly erudite –
awakens one with a jolt: ‘Hey, I knew that! How come I’d not already tooled
those words into my own thinking?’ And you carry home the concept and count it
as your own treasure.”

Friday, November 07, 2014

The Texas
Democratic Party needs to reboot. Here is a start at some things I suggest they
think about:

Democrats, PLEASE
don't act like God doesn't exist. A LOT of people in Texas are people of faith,
whether you like it or not. Our faith informs our politics, so don't discount
that, and for God's sake, don't patronize or condescend to us.

Texans who live
in rural areas aren't idiots. They are conservative the way people who make
their livings from the land are conservative. They are pragmatic conservatives,
and for the most part, they aren't mean spirited. They are usually whip smart
and endlessly inventive -- how do you think they'd manage to wrest out a living
in rural Texas otherwise? Respect them and their way of life and they will
listen to you.

Keep it positive
and keep it real. Don't make promises you can't keep. Acknowledge that most
Texans grew up around guns and that MOST of them, like me and others, learned
sensible rules about how to act around guns. I personally am not a gun owner,
but people I love and respect are. Talk sensibly about this -- don't pander.

Talk about what
this state needs. An educated work force is an economic issue. Companies moving
here need skilled workers. If our school systems can't provide that, they will
move elsewhere.

A healthy work
force is an economic issue. Sick people can't work. Access to health care for
everyone is an economic driver. Invest in it.

Women being able
to control their reproductive lives is an economic issue. There aren't enough
men to fill all the jobs so, yes, women will be needed. Safe contraception also
helps prevent unwanted pregnancies and thus reduces abortions.

Job safety is an
economic issue. Having workers die on the job is not only immoral, but it costs
money to retrain a replacement. Talk about these things in ways that the most
conservative business person can "get," in ways that relate to their
lives.

If our roads and
infrastructure are falling apart, goods and services can't be safely delivered.
INVESTMENT in these things is an economic driver, not a tax burden.

Poverty, not
race, not political party, not even quality of schools, is the greatest driver
of the most common problems in our state. It's related to failure to thrive, to
failure in school, to the likelihood of ending up in prison. Poor people are
NOT the enemy. Pragmatic compassion means investing in ALL Texans, not just
those above the poverty line.

Rich people are
not the enemy. Treat them with the same respect you do others -- the same
respect. Don't pander to them, and don't dismiss them.

Young people are
not "the future." Young people are HERE RIGHT NOW. Listen to them.
They are drawn to the relevant and the authentic. Don't just go for their
energy. Seek out their ideas, their dreams. And here's a thought -- Respect
them.

Technology is not
the answer to everything. It's a tool that makes life hugely more convenient
but it is RELATIONSHIPS that matter in politics, particularly in Texas
politics. There aren't six degrees of separation in Texas, as huge as this
state is. For many of us, if you diss some of us, you diss us all.

Pay your civic
rent. Work at the local level. Get involved in your city halls and your school
boards, Then work your way up. But for Pete's sake, get people to run for
office at all levels. We can't vote for Democrats if no Democrats are running.

OK. What else?

From comments on Facebook:

From Cindy Wood:
If there is no water, there should be no big companies moving here with
lots of employees and more housing needs. Job creation is one thing. However,
the drought is so destructive to those in the rural areas you talk about, as
well as parks and recreation, that all of Texas loses anytime another 100,
1000, 10,000, 100,000 people start drinking and bathing and watering their
grass. There is no water for growth.

From Terry Evans:
Find a way to separate issues of fairness and economic good sense from
emotional and philosophical prejudice in people's minds. For instance, if we
could get regular folks to look at gay marriage and marijuana legalization (at
least medical) without filtering the issues through culture-tinted glasses,
maybe they would see there's no valid reason to oppose them, and many good
reasons to allow them.

From Diane
Morrison Snow: We need to let people know about how many Texans now have
health insurance that are very proud to have it . And we need to expand
Medicaid and get that money that other states are getting because we turned it
down. We got Ann Richards in .. We can get another Democratic governor
in!

From Thomas
Baker: News flash: Some Dems are persons of faith or religion who simply
believe in separation of church and state. They sometimes get brief from both
sides: their faithful church friends and their faithful political friends.
Abortion is a real dividing line nowadays with Catholics. If you are a Dem your
Catholic friends and the church probably see you somehow as heretic if not
demonic because you support candidates from the perceived abortion party. I
personally abhor abortion. I see the side that government has power to make
some laws and I see that women have rights to make medical decisions regarding
their bodies with their doctors. To me abortion was the unspoken elephant in
the room in this gubernatorial election.

Saturday, September 06, 2014

You know, I really did want to support TREC.After all, I live in a diocese that has been flying the airplane while we are building it in the wake of a 2008 schism when our former bishop and much of the diocesan leadership left The Episcopal Church but claimed –and occupied – most of our church property. We have been Reimagining the Church like crazy around here ever since then. So I was eagerly awaiting TREC’s ideas.Others – Episcopal Café here and here, Tom Ferguson on his blog Crusty Old Deanhere, commentors on the HOB/D list -- have done brilliant jobs of outlining things they like and things that concern them, and I urge you to read them all. I haven’t written a detailed analysis. Instead, I offer a view from the other side of schism, for what it’s worth.My first reaction was - what business major wrote this and has he or she ever been to church?My second reaction was - has this person ever been to a General Convention?My third reaction was - did they really think through the implications of using Lazarus as a starting place?Seriously?Lazarus?And my fourth reaction was – did no one learn ANYTHING from what happened in San Joaquin, Quincy, Fort Worth, Pittsburgh, and, most recently, South Carolina? Full disclosure – I live in the Episcopal Diocese of Fort Worth. I am a lay woman coming at this from the perspective of a person who was confined to the margins of my diocese, and thus of General Convention, for more than 20 years. As an outsider I observed the workings of the church in ways that insiders don’t have to. For me, as for people of color, all women, for my LGBT sisters and brothers, learning the ways of those who held power was not a luxury – it was imperative if there was to be any chance of being heard in the councils of the church.Tipping the scales of the balance of power in favor of those traditionally on the margins was not then and is not now easy in an institution still steeped in clericalism and mesmerized by the color purple. But it is possible, with patience and a willingness to understand how the system works, to learn where the ways into the system are, and where the system offers opportunities for anyone to speak up. All of this is true, by the way, of ANY institutional system, no matter how big or small.In 2009, I suddenly was thrust into “insider” status. My bishop left The Episcopal Church, we reorganized the diocese, I was elected a deputy and, to my utter amazement, elected to Executive Council on the first ballot at General Convention in Anaheim. My work on the margins had given me enough name recognition to make that possible.At home my diocese and other reorganized dioceses still are working to rebuild in the wake of a schism that should have been prevented. I see amazing creativity and openness to new ways of being church. I see clergy learning to value the lay people with whom they partner. I see lay people growing into the fullness of their baptisms. I watch feisty small congregations take on ministry projects that would make many large congregations cower. I see displaced congregations growing into being Welcoming Congregations. I watch valiant Episcopalians in congregations that have been locked out of their church homes faithfully creating church from scratch every single Sunday in rented spaces they have access to only on Sunday. I see growth, small, but steady.Why? Because even though people are tired, they are not afraid. We are not into feeding the fears here.Of course, I also see families split between those who stayed with The Episcopal Church and those who stayed with Bishop Iker. I see time and way too much money being eaten up in legal fights that Could. Have. Been. Avoided.The schism in my diocese – as in San Joaquin, Quincy, Pittsburgh, and now South Carolina -- was more than 20 years in the making. The people organizing this move were almost to a man ordained (very few women were involved). They made no secret of their goals - read the Chapman memo and Jim Naughton’s Following the Money. Laity were disempowered. Those who protested were demonized and marginalized, and those who were compliant were used as tools to further the aims of the clergy. Purple reigned, with bishops taking the idea of “princes of the church” into new realms of virtually unchecked power.The twenty years leading up to the schisms were filled with strife fulminated by these people intent on undermining The Episcopal Church. They wanted a very public fight in which they would be seen standing up for patriarchy, “traditional marriage,” and a vision of The Episcopal Church as it was in the 1950s, when men were men and women – and minorities – knew their place. This had the effect of running off folks who don’t like conflict, folks who don’t like bigots, and folks who bought into the idea that politics is a dirty word. All these added to the ongoing decline in all the mainstream protestant denominations, which led to calls for a more “nimble” church.During this time, two presiding bishops and the House of Bishops worked hard to placate their brother bishops and fellow priests and their conservative allies in the Anglican Communion. This purple brotherhood did virtually nothing to stop the bishops who later would leave The Episcopal Church while laying claim to millions of dollars’ worth of Episcopal Church property. If you have wondered why the larger church should help pay the legal expenses of San Joaquin and South Carolina, it’s because the wider church’s inaction allowed this legal mess to happen.What happened in my diocese and the others happened not because General Convention is too big and too long, not because the PB doesn’t have enough power, not because there are too many CCABs, not because the Executive Council has too many people -- but because the balance between clergy and laity was tilted mightily in the direction of the clergy, silencing and marginalizing lay people. There were no countervailing voices strong enough to gainsay what the bishops were doing. There was no will among the House of Bishops to use even peer pressure, much less what canonical powers did exist, to rein these men in.And now comes TREC with a proposal to turn us into a Roman Catholic Church Light with our own PB pope, a much smaller role for laity in a smaller General Convention and Executive Council, and – has anyone noticed? No change at all in the frequent meetings and workings of the House of Bishops. Additionally, in a church full of small congregations, this proposal will insure that no one from a small congregation can be elected to anything, Episcopalians living west of the Mississippi will be invisible and church wide staff for the most part will be independent contractors, which absolves employers of any emotional investment as well as most of the financial investment made in regular employees.And all this is supposed to make us nimble – because look how nimble the Vatican is.

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

I am an Episcopalian because The Episcopal Church is not afraid
to explore what Baptism really means. When one is sealed as Christ’s Own
Forever, there are no asterisks. Women, men, gay, straight, trans, black,
white, Asian, Native American, Hispanic, mixed race – all are acknowledged as
part of the Body. Figuring out what this means in the context of scripture is
hard work. At its best, The Episcopal Church calls on everyone – bishops,
priests, deacons, lay people -- to work in partnership to figure it out. We don’t always get the balance right, but
what I love is that we keep trying, struggling to love one another even when we may not like one another.

About Me

Katie Sherrod is an independent writer, producer and commentator in Fort Worth, Texas.
She is the editor of and a contributor to "Grace & Gumption, Stories of Fort Worth Women", published by the TCU Press; and "Women of the Passion, a Journey to the Cross". Both are available at Amazon.com. She has been given many awards for her consistent advocacy of women's reproductive freedom and for her 25 years of writing about efforts to combat family violence. Her print media and broadcast awards include Best Newspaper Column, Best Radio Commentary and Best Interview/Talk Show from the Dallas Press Club, and the Exceptional Media Merit Award from the National Women's Political Caucus. She holds the Associated Press Managing Editors Award for feature writing, and the Texas Headliners Award for investigative reporting.
She was inducted into the Texas Women's Hall of Fame in 1987 for outstanding contributions in the field of communications, named one of Fort Worth's Outstanding Women in 1988 and Texas Woman of the Year in 1989.
She is married to the Rev. Gayland Pool. She has a daughter and two amazing grandsons.